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Cascadia movement - Wikipedia Cascadia movement The Cascadia movement is a collection of various heterogeneous movements seeking greater autonomy for the Pacific Northwest through a political coalition of the U S states of Oregon and Washington and the Canadian province of British Columbia
Home | Cascadia College Cascadia College in the Bothell community, near Seattle, offers Environmental Studies, Technology, Science, Engineering, Business, and General Transfer Degrees
The Cascadia Movement - Cascadia Department of Bioregion Cascadia is a popular grassroots movement that has inspired the imagination for more than forty years and spans tens of thousands of individuals, businesses and community groups throughout the Cascadia bioregion
History of the Cascadia Movement Cascadia is an idea, identity, movement and bioregion, that has been growing since the 1980s, driven by a vision of sustainability, environmental stewardship, and cultural connection to the land
Cascadia: A Bioregional Dream or a Geological Nightmare? Explore the allure and risks of Cascadia, the Pacific Northwest's dream of bioregional independence Discover its cultural identity, natural resources, and the looming threat of a megaquake from the Cascadia Subduction Zone
Cascadia Daily News: Bellingham, WA Local News, Sports, Events Cascadia Daily News provides in-depth election coverage of Whatcom and Skagit counties for readers free, outside our paywall, as a public service Thanks for supporting truly local news by donating to CDN or subscribing here
Cascadia (bioregion) - Wikipedia The Cascadia Bioregion encompasses all of the state of Washington, all but the southeastern corner of Idaho, and portions of Oregon, California, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, Montana, Alaska, Yukon, and British Columbia
About Cascadia — Cascadia Department of Bioregion The term Cascadia was adopted in 1981 by Seattle University professor David McCloskey as a way to better describe our growing regional identity McCloskey describes Cascadia as “a land of falling waters ”
Cascadia subduction zone - Wikipedia The Cascadia subduction zone is a 1,000 km (620 mi) long convergent plate boundary, about 100–200 km (70–100 mi) off the Pacific coast of North America, that stretches from northern Vancouver Island in Canada to Northern California in the United States [1]